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French presidenti­al elections bring their own surprises

- BY MATHEW DICKERSON SMALL BUSINESS RULES CONSULTANT

ANY review of a year is tough. What were the important aspects? What items were revolution­ary rather than just evolutiona­ry? What should be left out? Looking back over technology for the last year was very tough.

There are so many technologi­cal advancemen­ts made every day it is hard to narrow down the list for a year. Keep in mind that last year the ten highest patent lodging companies had 36,108 patents amongst them. That is almost one hundred patents a day from only ten companies.

All of that is a way of saying go easy on me if I leave something out you think should be mentioned!

Batteries

One of the major technology items in the news this year was the spontaneou­s combustion of batteries. Lithium-ion batteries are used in millions of devices across the world because they can store relatively large amounts of energy in a small space. Unfortunat­ely, the movement of particles inside the battery causes heat to build-up and, in a poorly designed battery, the heat can damage the thin walls that keep the different parts of the battery separate.

Cue Hoverboard­s (I don’t know why they have that name as they don’t actually hover – but that is an article in itself) at the end of last year; HP notebooks in June this year and the biggest battery story of the year, the Samsung Note 7 which was released in August this year. The recall and then subsequent complete withdrawal of the product will cost Samsung an estimated US$17 billion.

Maybe 2016 was the year of the battery.

Virtual Reality

Virtual Reality (VR) has been talked about for many years and different launches and claims have been made over the years – but this year finally saw the rubber hit the road in the VR world. Competitio­n always drives better solutions and the VR world is no different. With Oculus Rift; HTC Vive; Microsoft Hololens and the Playstatio­n VR headset in addition to devices made to work with smartphone­s such as the Samsung and Google headsets the world of VR has started to become real – in a virtual sense. They aren’t perfect yet but, having tried a few different models, they are certainly very good.

Maybe we will look back in years to come and say that 2016 was the year that VR was launched into the mainstream.

Autonomous vehicle

Autonomous vehicles are edging closer to reality but, despite Google cars driving over three million kilometres in self-driving mode, there is a still some way to go before we will be able to tell our car to drop us off at the pub and collect us at midnight.

A Tesla driver is unfortunat­ely no longer with us having died in a crash while the vehicle was in autonomous mode so, apart from public confidence, the engineers admit there are still minor issues to be rectified before we could declare any year as the year of the fully automatic car.

Pokemon Go!

As has been the case for many years, apps were launched for our smartphone­s that delivered solutions to problems we didn’t even know we had. With over one million different apps available, you could be excused for thinking that there are no big opportunit­ies left in the world of apps.

That logic would be reasonable until an app came along that only took nineteen days before it was downloaded over fifty million times and has now been downloaded over half a billion times. With more first week downloads than any other app in the history of the Apple App Store, there would be a reasonable argument to say that 2016 was the year of Pokémon GO.

Data Security

The simple passcode you put on your phone to stop your friends picking up your phone and sending random texts to people in your address book seems like a good idea – until you can’t remember the code you used.

Many people think it is a simple matter of taking the phone to your local retailer or supplier and asking them to unlock it. Syed Farook was one of the shooters involved in the San Bernardino attack a year ago that left 14 people dead.

When the FBI recovered his locked iphone, they thought it would be nice if Apple unlocked it for them. This was the FBI after all and this person had randomly killed US citizens. The informatio­n on his phone could deliver critical informatio­n. Apple declined due to its policy to never undermine the security features of its products. That is taking security seriously.

Maybe 2016 was the year of recognisin­g the importance of security.

Having considered a few of these significan­t technology aspects of 2016 and looking through many more potential items that could have made the list, it is hard to define this year by any one technology component. If I had to pick a theme for the year, I would say 2016 was the year of technology itself – just like so many before and so many that will come after. Merry Christmas to all of the readers of this column. I hope that Santa delivers you lots of electronic gadgets and I look forward to talking about more technology in 2017.

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